The accounts of the country, and of the Indian tribes, correspond with what we learn from other sources; and gentlemen of information in Indian affairs believe the work to be the genuine production of a person who has been over the ground described.
According to this work, Lavall was a native of Philadelphia, and born in 1774. His father, who was a royalist, settled in Upper Canada, and engaged in the fur trade. In 1809 Baptist Vincent Lavall visited England to receive a legacy left him by a relation. Here he was persuaded to join a vessel fitting out for the purpose of trading in the North Pacific. It was a schooner of about two hundred tons, called the Sea Otter, commanded by Captain Niles. This vessel was lost upon the coast of Oregon, on the 15th of August, 1809, whilst Lavall and three of the crew were on shore hunting. They made their way across the continent to New Orleans.
Can any information be furnished from any custom-house in England as to the Sea Otter, Captain Niles?
William Duane.
Philadelphia.
GRAVES OF MICKLETON, CO. GLOUCESTER.
There are three portraits engraved by Vertue, which give the pedigree of this family thus far:
| John Graves of York, born 1515, ob. 1616. | = | |||||||||||||||
| —— Graves | = | |||||||||||||||
| = Richard Graves of Mickleton, Esq., ob. 1669.ickleton, Esq., | = | |||||||||||||||
| —— Graves | = | |||||||||||||||
| Richard Graves of Mickleton, Esq. ob. 1731.ckleton, Esq. | = | |||||||||||||||
The title engraved on the plate states that the first Richard Graves given above, was twice